141 research outputs found

    Guitar Recital Document

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    This document, a supplement to a recital; contains biographical, historical, analytical, and performance-related information about the works that are on the program. Chapters are arranged chronologically according to their historical period, and feature the following composers/works: Alonso de Mudarra’s Fantasía que contrahaze la harpa en la manera de Ludovico from Tres libros de musica en cifras para vihuela; François Couperin’s La Convalescente from Pièces de clavecin; Johann Sebastian Bach’s Preludio, Fuga, y Allegro BWV 998; Isaac Albéniz’s Granada from Suite Española Op. 47; Manuel de Falla’s Homenaje: Pièce de Guitare Écrite pour le Tombeau de Claude Debussy; William Walton’s Bagatelles II and III from 5 Bagatelles for Guitar; and Joseph Breznikar’s Etude 3 Free-Form Fugue, Etude 8 Reflective Repetitions, and Etude 11 Shimmering Streams from Twelve American Etudes for guitar. The works feature a variety of musical elements, and their technical aspects of performance include: tremolo, tambora, right hand arpeggio formula, natural and artificial harmonics, glissando, and upper-register playing

    Anatomic and physiologic changes in lower extremity venous hemodynamics associated with pregnancy

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    AbstractPurpose: The purpose of this study was to describe the physiologic effects of pregnancy on lower extremity venous hemodynamics.Methods: Eight pregnant women, six with no known venous disease (NVD) and two with documented deep venous obstruction (DVO), were identified in the first trimester (TM) and studied monthly until delivery and once postpartum (pp) by air plethysmography and duplex scan.Results: None of six women in the NVD group (12 extremities) had obstruction or elevated ambulatory venous pressures as estimated by air plethysmography. In addition, despite significant increases in common femoral vein and saphenofemoral junction diameters, no woman in the NVD group had reflux by either test. Venous filling index increased significantly during pregnancy and decreased significantly pp, but all values remained within the normal range (0.55 ± 0.2 ml/sec first TM, 1.01 ± 0.38 ml/sec late third TM, 0.58 ± 0.08 ml/sec pp; p < 0.03 both comparisons). Common femoral vein diameters increased and decreased in similar fashion (0.99 ± 0.25 cm first TM, 1.21 ± 0.25 cm late third TM, 0.80 ± 0.11 cm pp; p < 0.0005 first vs late third TM, p < 0.005 late third TM vs pp). Saphenofemoral junction vein diameters similarly increased and decreased in size (0.46 ± 0.07 cm first TM, 0.68 ± 0.19 cm late third TM, 0.50 ± 0.10 cm pp; p < 0.01 first vs late third TM, p < 0.03 late third TM vs pp). Neither of the two women in the DVO group showed deterioration of outflow fraction or venous filling index as pregnancy progressed, and neither had thromboembolic complications despite moderate to severe preexisting obstruction. Both women in the DVO group delivered uneventfully. No woman in either group developed varicose veins.Conclusion: Pregnancy-induced changes in lower extremity venous hemodynamics in the NVD and DVO groups were detected but were small. Hormonal or other systemic factors must play a significant role in the development of postpartum varicose veins. (J Vasc Surg 1996;24:763-7.

    Mycotic renal artery degeneration and systemic sepsis caused by infected renal artery stent

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    AbstractA case of Staphylococcus aureus renal artery stent infection was studied. Fourteen days after the procedure, the patient had a fever, hypotension, and an elevated white blood cell (WBC) count. Blood cultures were positive for S aureus on admission and during the patient's hospitalization, despite intravenous vancomycin therapy. Evaluation included serial CT scans, revealing increasing persistent inflammation with development of multiple renal intraparenchymal abscesses, and arteriography, showing marked degeneration of the renal artery. Therapy required resection of the renal artery/stent and nephrectomy. This case confirms the severe nature of S aureus stent infection; we recommend prophylactic antibiotics before these procedures, as well as expeditious evaluation and consideration for aggressive surgical therapy if this complication is suspected. (J Vasc Surg 1998;28:547-50.

    The Vehicle, 1973

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    Vol. 15, No. 1 Table of Contents Hail to the Cheeks of MenNancy Broom Brownpage 1 Sister Eleanor\u27s Gray FriendsGina Morganpage 2 The Typing TeacherAnne Hubbardpage 3 Pensive AgainPeter McCullarpage 7 The Defense ManKathryn Majorpage 9 Wedding PreparationKathryn R. Leesmanpage 10 Reflections on BathingChris Benignuspage 14 Home: Bed of DustHelen Matternpage 14 One TimeChris Benignuspage 15 CombineRuth Ann Meyerpage 16 Park SitterEric H. Synderpage 17 The Sole TortoiseDennis Kroftpage 18 Blind SocietyMike Cordtspage 19 Black DreamPeter McCullarpage 21 The Poetry ReadingRay Schmuddepage 22 The FuneralMarsha Halfordpage 23 She and HerRosanne Davispage 24 The Cane Pole LungfishJeff Kayserpage 26 Du, stille WeltMary Bassettpage 27 ComradesNancy Broom Brownpage 29 Photography and Art Credits Dann Girecover, page 18 Mark McKinneypage 2, 17, 25 John Gravespage 8 Sally Brotherspage 13 Normal Le Clercqpage 28 Wm. Murawskipage 30https://thekeep.eiu.edu/vehicle/1029/thumbnail.jp

    ShadowTutor: Distributed Partial Distillation for Mobile Video DNN Inference

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    Following the recent success of deep neural networks (DNN) on video computer vision tasks, performing DNN inferences on videos that originate from mobile devices has gained practical significance. As such, previous approaches developed methods to offload DNN inference computations for images to cloud servers to manage the resource constraints of mobile devices. However, when it comes to video data, communicating information of every frame consumes excessive network bandwidth and renders the entire system susceptible to adverse network conditions such as congestion. Thus, in this work, we seek to exploit the temporal coherence between nearby frames of a video stream to mitigate network pressure. That is, we propose ShadowTutor, a distributed video DNN inference framework that reduces the number of network transmissions through intermittent knowledge distillation to a student model. Moreover, we update only a subset of the student's parameters, which we call partial distillation, to reduce the data size of each network transmission. Specifically, the server runs a large and general teacher model, and the mobile device only runs an extremely small but specialized student model. On sparsely selected key frames, the server partially trains the student model by targeting the teacher's response and sends the updated part to the mobile device. We investigate the effectiveness of ShadowTutor with HD video semantic segmentation. Evaluations show that network data transfer is reduced by 95% on average. Moreover, the throughput of the system is improved by over three times and shows robustness to changes in network bandwidth.Comment: Accepted at ICPP 202

    Degree of adaptive male mate choice is positively correlated with female quality variance

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    When the cost of reproduction for males and variance in female quality are high, males are predicted to show adaptive mate choice. Using Drosophila melanogaster, we test this prediction and show that sperm limited males preferentially mated with young and/or well fed females. The preferred females had higher reproductive output – direct evidence of adaptive precopulatory male mate choice. Our most striking finding is the strong positive correlation between the degree of mating bias showed by the males and the variance in the fitness of the females. We discuss the possible mechanism for such adaptive male mate choice and propose that such choice has important consequences with respect to the existing understanding of the mating system and the evolution of aging

    Cost of Mating and Insemination Capacity of a Genetically Modified Mosquito Aedes aegypti OX513A Compared to Its Wild Type Counterpart

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    The idea of implementing genetics-based insect control strategies modelled on the traditional SIT is becoming increasingly popular. In this paper we compare a genetically modified line of Aedes aegypti carrying a tetracycline repressible, lethal positive feedback system (OX513A) with its wild type counterpart with respect to their insemination capacities and the cost of courtship and mating. Genetically modified males inseminated just over half as many females as the wild type males during their lifetime. Providing days of rest from mating had no significant effect on the total number of females inseminated by males of either line, but it did increase their longevity. Producing sperm had a low cost in terms of energy investment; the cost of transferring this sperm to a receptive female was much higher. Continued mating attempts with refractory females suggest that males could not identify refractory females before investing substantial energy in courtship. Although over a lifetime OX513A males inseminated fewer females, the number of females inseminated over the first three days, was similar between males of the two lines, suggesting that the identified cost of RIDL may have little impact on the outcome of SIT-based control programmes with frequent releases of the genetically modified males

    Introduction of Genetically Engineered Organisms - Draft Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement—July 2007

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    The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) regulates the environmental introduction of genetically engineered (GE) organisms, including crop and noncrop plants, vertebrate and invertebrate animals, and micro-organisms. APHIS regulations are grounded in the most up-to-date science and are designed to provide a level of oversight appropriate for the safe introduction of GE organisms. APHIS is considering whether revisions to its regulations are necessary. One purpose of such revisions would be to address current and future technological trends resulting in GE plants with which the agency is less familiar, such as plants with environmental stress tolerance or enhanced nutrition, and plants engineered for new purposes such as biofuels or for production of pharmaceutical or industrial compounds. Additionally, the regulations would be revised to ensure a high level of environmental protection, to create regulatory processes that are transparent to stakeholders and the public, to consider the efficient use of agency resources, to ensure that the level of oversight is commensurate with the risk, and to ensure conformity with obligations under international treaties and agreements, such as World Trade Organization (WTO) agreements. To this end, this draft environmental impact statement (DEIS) was prepared to provide agency decisionmakers with a full range of regulatory alternatives and assist them in selecting a preferred alternative
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